INDEX. 



927 



Kerr (Dr. J.) on electro-optics, 157 ; on 

 dispersion in double refraction due to 

 electric stress, ib. 



Kerr (J. G.), exhibition of photographs, 

 weapons, &c., of Toba Indians of Gran 

 Chaco, 900. 



Kidston (R.) on the best methods for the 

 registration of the type specimens of 

 British fossils, 289; on the collection, 

 preservation, and systematic registra- 

 tion of photographs of geological in- 

 terest in the United Kingdom, 290. 



Kipping (Dr. F. S.), * synthesis of hy- 

 drindon derivatives, 680 ; * hepta- 

 methylene derivatives, ib. ; * action of 

 phosphoric anhydride on fatty acids, 

 ib. 



Knott (Prof. C. G.), certain volume 

 effects of magnetisation, 659. 



Knubley (Rev. E. P.) on making a digest 

 of the observations on the migration of 

 birds, 366. 



Kootenay Indians of South-eastern 

 British Columbia, report on the, by 

 Dr. A. F. Chamberlain, 549. 



Korea, North, by C. W. Campbell, 820. 



Kyle (Prof. J. J. J.) on a vanadiferous 

 lignite found in the Argentine Republic, 

 ■with analysis of the ash, 686. 



Labridffi, the development of the pharyn- 

 geal teeth in the, by Prof. E. E. Prince, 

 773. 



Lampreys and hags. Dr. J. Beard on, 789. 



Landslips in the St. Cassian strata of S. 

 Tyrol, by Miss M. M. Ogilvie, 721. 



Langley (Prof. J. W.) on tlie best method 

 of establishing an international stand- 

 ard for the analysis of iron and steel, 

 186. 



Lankester (Prof. Ray) on the occupa- 

 tion of a table at the zoological station 

 at Naples, 344 ; on the occupation of a 

 table at the laboratory of the Marine 

 Biological Association at Plymouth, 

 356. 



Lapworth (Prof. C), Address to the Geo- 

 logical Section by, 695. 



Larmor (J.) on electrolysis in its physi- 

 cal and chemical bearings, 72. 



Larv» and their relations to adult forms, 

 by Dr. J. Beard, 757. 



Latham (B.) on the climatological and 

 hydrographical conditions of tropical 

 Africa, 367. 



Laurie (M.), additions to tlie eurypterid 

 fauna of the Upper Silurian, 724. 



♦Lawrence (H. N.), the human body as a 

 conductor of electricity, 792. 



Layard (Miss N. F.) on the arrangement 

 of the buds in Lemna minor, 747. 



Leaky magnetic circles, Dr. H. E. J. G. 

 du Bois on, 636. 



Lean (B.) and W. A. Bone, the explosion 

 of ethylene with less than its own 

 volume of oxygen, 673 ; a new method 

 for measuring the pressure produced 

 in gaseous explosions, 684. 



Lebour (Prof. G. A.) on underground 

 temperature, 129 ; on the circulation 

 of underground waters, 264 ; on the 

 advisability and possibility of esta- 

 blishing observations upon the preva- 

 lence of earth tremors, 343. 



Leeds (Dr. A. R.) on the bibUography of 

 solution, 261. 



Leefe (R. B.) on the past and present 

 condition of the natives of the Friendly 

 Islands, or Tonga, 903. 



Lees (C. H.) on a method of determining 

 thermal conductivities, 647. 



Legislation in America and elsewhere on 

 behalf of destitute and neglected 

 children, by Rosa M. Barratt, 842. 



Leipner (Prof. A.) on proposals for the 

 legislative protection of wild birds' 

 eggs, 366. 



Lemna minor, the arrangement of the 

 buds in. Miss N. F. Layard on, 747. 



•Lepidopterouspupse, recent experiments 

 on the modification of the colours of, 

 by E. B. Poulton, 786. 



Lewes (Prof. V. B.) on the proximate 

 constituents of the various kinds of 

 coal, 264 ; on the luminosity of hydro- 

 carbon flames, 674. 



Light, the action of, on the hydracids of 

 the halogens in presence of oxygen, 

 report on, 192. 



, ,upon dyed colours, provisional 



report on, 263. 



Lightning protectors, the destruction of, 

 by recent municipal legislation, by W. 

 H. Preece, 871. 



Limerick traps, W. W. Watts on some, 

 727. 



Lindeck (Dr. St.) on wire standards of 

 electrical resistance, 139. 



Linguistic ethnology, H. Hale on, 545. 



♦Liquid oxj'gen, on the spectrum of, and 

 on the refraction indices of liquid 

 oxygen, nitrous oxide, and ethylene, 

 by Profs. G. D. Liveing and J. Dewar, 

 658. 



Liveing (Prof.) on researches on the 

 ultra-violet rays of the solar spec- 

 trum, 74; on wave-length tables of 

 the spectra of the elements and com- 

 pounds, 193. 



* and Prof. J. Dewar on the spec- 

 trum of liquid oxygen, and on the re- 

 fraction indices of liquid oxygen, 

 nitrous oxide, and ethylene, 658. 



Lizard district, the relations of the rocks 

 of the, A. Somervail on, 719. 



♦Lobengula's capital, acro.ss 'he Veldt to, 

 by Lieut., H. C. Browne, 817. 



